Level: 15
Blinds: 1,500/3,000
Ante: 500
Level: 15
Blinds: 1,500/3,000
Ante: 500
Craig Sarner got the last of his stack in with and found himself up against the
of Paul McCaffrey.
Despite being well out in front of McCaffrey's ragged ace, Sarner sweated the drop of each and ever board card, anticipating the arrival of that dreaded ace.
"There's always an ace out there..." said Sarner to himself, watching as the dealer produced a board of .
Despite his ominous premonition, Sarner's ladies faded the deck's aces and he scored a crucial double up to keep himself in contention.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
|
74,000
-86,000
|
-86,000 |
|
64,000
27,000
|
27,000 |
With only five eliminations standing between the remaining players and the money, play has slowed down considerably during the last few minutes.
We watched a massive 200,000 pot develop between Day 1 chip leader Brian Cavaliere and David Lackey, but when the two showed down, both players held identical two-pair hands for chopped pot.
After playing 11 levels yesterday, and making a deep run at the final table here today, none of the remaining 12 runners wants to fall short of making the money, so we expect the slow pace to continue as the bubble looms.
We heard a rush of commotion coming from Table #41, and after rushing over to take a look we discovered a three-way all in developing.
James Peters open-jammed for his last 30,000 or so, and Lee Childs did the same for about 55,000.
That's when Timothy Little looked down to find the prettiest sight in poker: in the hole and players already all in and at risk.
Little snap-called off for his remaining stack, which was slightly less than Childs' at the time, and the three players showed down. Childs produced the for a solid pocket pair, while Peters could only muster the
for a short-stack plunge. Little was well ahead with his pocket rockets, and if the board came clean he would notch a huge triple up.
The flop rolled out to keep Little in the lead, and he was now fading the only two jacks in the deck (along with a miracle runner-runner spike for Peter's king-high hand). Childs called for the jack of diamonds, knowing exactly how much of a longshot his prayer really was.
Turn:
Just like that, a savior rained down from the heavens to give Childs a full house, and when the river failed to produce a third ace, the massive 155,000 pot was shipped his way.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
![]() |
155,000
87,000
|
87,000 |
|
Busted | |
![]() |
Busted |
Tim Bryan's last 16,000 or so was committed on the flop and Paul McCaffrey looked him up with
for overcards and a flush draw.
Bryan held the for a made hand at the moment, but he was fading kings, queens and clubs to survive. The turn card came
to keep Bryan in the lead, but the
fell on the river to end his tournament with a 15th place finish.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
|
160,000
49,000
|
49,000 |
![]() |
Busted |
Playing from UTG+1, Lee Childs opened for 5,000, and next to act Timothy Little three-bet shove for his last 44,000 .
The action folded back around to Childs, who insta-folded his hand to send the pot one seat over to Little.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
![]() |
68,000
-8,000
|
-8,000 |
![]() |
58,000
16,000
|
16,000 |
The tournament has resumed after the recent break and cards are back in the air.
Level: 14
Blinds: 1,200/2,400
Ante: 400
With the field standing to stretch for a 15-minute break, here is where the final 15 stand on the leaderboard.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
![]() |
192,000
56,000
|
56,000 |
![]() |
186,000
4,400
|
4,400 |
![]() |
179,000
38,000
|
38,000 |
![]() |
168,000
58,000
|
58,000 |
![]() |
115,000
8,700
|
8,700 |
![]() |
112,000
23,600
|
23,600 |
|
111,000
-10,600
|
-10,600 |
![]() |
105,000
52,200
|
52,200 |
|
93,000
9,000
|
9,000 |
![]() |
76,000
26,000
|
26,000 |
|
44,000
-32,500
|
-32,500 |
![]() |
42,000
-54,000
|
-54,000 |
|
37,000
-200
|
-200 |
![]() |
36,000
-14,100
|
-14,100 |
|
36,000
-33,300
|
-33,300 |
The tournament is now paused for a 15-minute break.